rogerthebodger
Well-Known Member
Inland water authorities will not allow glass bowl filters due to the possibility of breakage and thus the fire risk.
Inland water authorities will not allow glass bowl filters due to the possibility of breakage and thus the fire risk.
Dump the cav filters in favour the spin on version. I am in the process of doing so, having had a nightmare with those cav type .. I bought mine from ssl. They seem good quality and very cheap.. I am going to use iveco original filters, because I already have them,
Quite possibly, I did actually change one because the optional "heat shield" costs twice a replacement unit.No doubt at some point in the past an investigation of an ncident may have discovered a fragmented bowl! It might not have been known if this was the cause of the incident or a result of the incident????
Yes the Boat Safety Scheme certainly used to refer to the use of suitable bowls to suite the canal authority rules and this would form part of a boat safety nspection.
Glass bowls are in use all around the world and seem to be accepted elsewhere . You might be able to sell yours if changing to steel ?
Once you have done it a few times then it will be simple. nothing wrong with the CAV and the filters are very cheap.
I think he's referring to the ones I linked in this comment?could we have a link please?
Thanks! You answered my next question before I had even asked it!Fitting a sediment bow/water trap l before the filter is a good idea, it helps protect the filter.
No doubt at some point in the past an investigation of an ncident may have discovered a fragmented bowl! It might not have been known if this was the cause of the incident or a result of the incident????
Yes the Boat Safety Scheme certainly used to refer to the use of suitable bowls to suite the canal authority rules and this would form part of a boat safety nspection.
Glass bowls are in use all around the world and seem to be accepted elsewhere . You might be able to sell yours if changing to steel ?
Yup, I have SFAS2 (top right)Thanks! You answered my next question before I had even asked it!
I guess any of these would be ok?
SSL diesel Parts | Filter assemblies | Water traps
See post number 10.. for link to supplierscould we have a link please?
cheers
V.
This is exactly what I did, though I thought a gauge was a bit over the top for a Snapdragon! The whole job cost me change from £50. I changed the filters after 10 years because they were getting rusty enough for me to be concerned about pin holesThe gold standard is spin on filters in parallel, pressure gauge on filter inlet, I prefer built in priming pump on the filter housing Google Image Result for https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/kcMAAOSwS5RdzR8Y/s-l300.jpg
Switching to this arrangement could save money (especially if you buy from scrapyard) as you don't need to change filters at fixed intervals.
If you'd stayed with annual filter changes as most do, you'd have bought 20 @ say fiver each.This is exactly what I did, though I thought a gauge was a bit over the top for a Snapdragon! The whole job cost me change from £50. I changed the filters after 10 years because they were getting rusty enough for me to be concerned about pin holes
I'm inclined to prefer those too, just didn't see them listed by the marine suppliers I found - obviously I don't know enough about filters to search for the right thing. E.g. searching "spin on fuel filter" will return both racor ones and like this.I prefer built in priming pump on the filter housing Google Image Result for https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/kcMAAOSwS5RdzR8Y/s-l300.jpg
Why? Because you're using the same kind of filter in parallel or a different kind of filter?Switching to this arrangement could save money (especially if you buy from scrapyard) as you don't need to change filters at fixed intervals.